SpiralTruth

Just another post-modern quest for meaning.

The Muses that Drive Us

Since seeing Elizabeth Gilbert’s TED talk on creativity, I’ve thought a lot about muses. When we hear someone refer to a muse, we often think of a beautiful woman with whom a poet is deeply in love, writing poem after poem after poem for. I shudder to think of how many poor women have been tormented by moronic attempts at verse because of this personification. Ladies, you have my sympathy.

That’s not to say muses aren’t important. Gilbert’s talk made me realize that, far from simply being an easy source of inspiration, they’re a necessary mechanism an artist uses to keep from becoming too self-absorbed while creating some very personal and subjective things. A muse brings coherence to these personal experiences, making them transcend the person. It simultaneously allows an artist to maintain a comfortable distance from whatever it is that torments him to create and provides a framework in which others can understand those creations.

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21st Century Art: Opportunity… or nihilism?

I’ve always been rather serious about art. It’s more about obsession than fun and it often carries the burden and the zeal of a religion. There’s this notion that all the mistakes I’ve ever made, anything I might consider foolish or shameful, is somehow made right by creating something that transcends myself – something that somehow taps into the universal and eternal. I love the way art can turn ugliness into beauty and bring order to what can seem so cruel and random. The flip side of this is a constant dissatisfaction with whatever I create and a feeling of almost frantic discomfort when I don’t feel I’ve created enough.

How much is enough? I don’t know. I’ve written and recorded over sixty songs, finished a novel, designed the websites I use to promote all of this and… that just doesn’t seem like much after having done it. What I do think a lot about is whether I’ll write another song or book and whether they’ll be any good. Or about how I haven’t worked hard enough to market what I have created. Marketing has always seemed like a dark art to me. I’d rather not have to understand it but I know how important it is. Especially now. We’re at this amazing period in human history where everyone has a voice. Never before has the ability to have your ideas reach millions of people been so democratized. The problem now, of course, is how to be heard over the chatter. And anyone looking to do that also has to ask themselves whether or not they deserve to be heard.

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Changing directions…

When I was in high school, I had an English teacher that was very much against the use of “I” in writing. Perhaps because he seemed so sure of himself and I was so unsure of myself, that advice sort of stuck in my head, and I suppose it’s good advice when you’re writing high school essays. In hindsight, I think another high school English teacher gave me something much more valuable when he taught me to hate clichés. Sometimes I still use them because, overused or not, they’re the best say something, but I still hate them and agonize over them. But the “I” thing did a little more harm than good. It instilled this Catholic-like guilt in me, admonishing me to take myself out of my writing in order for it to be more persuasive. It’s also a very journalistic way of looking at the world. Journalists feel they are doing their job better by taking themselves out of the story. The problem is, it’s never true. No matter how objective a piece of writing sounds, it is always written by someone. I think that’s why I like Hunter S. Thompson so much. He saw through all that and decided to go out of his way to be in the news he was reporting. (more…)

How to Write a Book

Steven Johnson wrote a great post about how to write a book on BoingBoing today. I like how he gives himself a lot of time to play with ideas and how he manages that play with Devonthink. I think maximizing creativity isn’t necessarily about putting more effort into thinking creatively as it is about properly handling and recording the flashes of insight that we all have. Having a wide range of tools at your disposal, and especially having one or two that you can access often, will go a long way in allowing creative moments to be properly managed, perhaps avoiding the much feared disease that is writer’s block. I wish I had had a system like this when I started writing. I think the entire process could have been a lot easier than it turned out to be.

The Publishing Odyssey III

I received a response from the publisher I was forwarded to this morning. Very exciting stuff. So exciting, in fact, that before I hurriedly sent off that manuscript, the musician in me, who has been screwed over so many times he’s lost count started to speak up and say, “Hey, this isn’t so different from the music world, and nothing good comes without the feeling that you’ve smashed your head against a billion brick walls.” And so I whipped out my google-fu and did a quick check on this “traditional publisher”. Aha… they are under investigation in Florida and also on at least one “Writer Beware” page. I also found some forum posts from people who have submitted queries to them where the initial responses seemed very similar to the one they sent me. People who went further, were recommended to pay for professional editing. The editors chosen were also associated in some way with this network of companies and were presumably getting kickbacks from referrals. Basically, they seem legit in the sense that they’re not completely scamming you, but more in the sense that you’ll probably end up paying as much as you would if you went the self-publishing route, plus you’d be under contract with them. The warnings also mentioned that the company’s track record of commercial book or script sales is not known. I double-checked on Amazon and found that every title I searched for was indeed listed and they were listed as the publisher, but I wasn’t able to find any book with more than one review, which makes me wonder how much these books are pushed. (more…)

Cultivating a Writing Habit

Chris Brogan just wrote a great post on writing habits. I just finished the final draft of my first novel, Leaving Wonderland (preview here), and I think he was pretty bang on. His emphasis on structure is key. I wrote Leaving Wonderland in chunks. A scene here, a scene there. Sometimes I didn’t know where something would even fit as I wrote it. But even writing in this sort of haphazard way, I always had the major plot points in mind. The beginning and the end were never in question. This novel was also the last in a long line of false starts. None of those false starts were particularly bad ideas. It’s easy to come up with great ideas for a novel. The problem was that I simply ran out of steam. And I ran out of steam because I hadn’t written enough to know how to keep motivated on an idea. The only cure for that is, of course, to keep writing. Chris takes a much better approach than I did originally, by writing in many different formats and on many different subjects. Always writing about something allows him to hone his skills and get valuable feedback about finished works while he chips away at the longer pieces. One of my karate senseis told us that the only secret to karate is repetition. Same goes for writing. You just have to do it over and over again until it gets to where you want it to be.

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